The
world is closer to a food crisis than most people realise Lester R.
Brown
Unless
we move quickly to adopt new population, energy, and water policies,
the goal of eradicating hunger will remain just that
Lester
R. Brown
24
July, 2012
In
the early spring this year, US farmers were on their way to planting
some 96m acres in corn, the most in 75 years. A warm early spring got
the crop off to a great start.Analysts
were predicting the
largest corn harvest on record.
The
United States is the leading producer and exporter of corn, the
world's feedgrain. At home, corn accounts for four-fifths of the US
grain harvest. Internationally, the US corn crop exceeds China's rice
and wheat harvests combined. Among the big three grains – corn,
wheat, and rice – corn is now the leader, with production well
above that of wheat and nearly double that of rice.
The
corn plant is as sensitive as it is productive. Thirsty and
fast-growing, it is vulnerable to both extreme heat and drought. At
elevated temperatures, the corn plant, which is normally so
productive, goes into thermal shock.
As
spring turned into summer, the thermometer began to rise across the
corn belt. In St Louis, Missouri, in the southern corn belt, the
temperature in late June and early July climbed to 100F or higher 10
days in a row. For the past several weeks, the
corn belt has been blanketed with dehydrating heat.
Weekly
drought maps published by the University of Nebraska show
the drought-stricken area spreading across more and more of the
country until, by mid-July, it engulfed virtually the entire corn
belt. Soil moisture readings in the corn belt are now among the
lowest ever recorded.
While
temperature, rainfall, and drought serve as indirect indicators of
crop growing conditions, each
week the US Department of Agriculture releases a report on
the actual state of the corn crop. This year the early reports were
promising. On 21 May, 77% of the US corn crop was rated as good to
excellent.
The following week the share of the crop in this category
dropped to 72%. Over the next eight weeks, it dropped to 26%, one of
the lowest ratings on record. The other 74% is rated very poor to
fair. And the crop is still deteriorating.
Over
a span of weeks, we have seen how the more extreme weather events
that come with climate change can affect food security. Since the
beginning of June, corn prices have increased by nearly one half,
reaching an all-time high on 19 July.
Although
the world was hoping for a good US harvest to replenish dangerously
low grain stocks, this is no longer on the cards. World carryover
stocks of grain will fall further at the end of this crop year,
making the food situation even more precarious. Food prices, already
elevated, will follow the price of corn upward, quite possibly to
record highs.
Not
only is the current food situation deteriorating, but so is the
global food system itself. We saw early
signs of the unraveling in 2008 following
an abrupt doubling of world grain prices. As world food prices
climbed, exporting countries began restricting grain exports to keep
their domestic food prices down. In response, governments of
importing countries panicked. Some of them turned to buying or
leasing land in other countries on which to produce food for
themselves.
Welcome
to the new geopolitics of food scarcity. As food supplies tighten, we
are moving into a new food era, one in which it is every country for
itself.
The
world is in serious trouble on the food front. But there is little
evidence that political leaders have yet grasped the magnitude of
what is happening. The progress in reducing hunger in recent decades
has been reversed. Unless we move quickly to adopt new population,
energy, and water policies, the goal of eradicating hunger will
remain just that.
Time
is running out. The world may be much closer to an unmanageable food
shortage – replete with soaring food prices, spreading food unrest,
and ultimately political instability– than most people realise.
• Lester
R. Brown is the president of the Earth Policy Institute and author
ofFull
Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity,
due to be published in October
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